Madam Speaker, I would go back to where I started in my remarks in the speech. It is not an actual piece of legislation. We have heard Conservative members reference the Canada sovereignty act. As far as I know, and I would have to check with the table officers, there has not actually been a piece of legislation tabled before this place. The Conservatives have simply put principles on a piece of paper and suggested that the government should introduce that.
I have hopefully reminded Canadians at home and my own fellow parliamentarians that we have the measures the Conservatives are talking about around reducing red tape, advancing major national projects and focusing on economic resiliency. That is in the budget implementation act.
However, I have highlighted a number of areas in which the Conservatives have not been thoughtful with respect to their policies today. There is nothing on trade diversification, nothing on the future of artificial intelligence and what it means, nothing on hard defence in terms of investments in the Canadian Armed Forces and where they stand on that policy, and nothing as it relates to some of the actual concrete investments in farmers.
Again, the Conservatives like to mention farmers, but there has not been really concrete policy about what they would do for Canada's farmers. We have a plan for that. That matters for folks in Kings—Hants. The last thing I will say is what we have introduced: a national food security strategy, which I look forward to talking about later—
